Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1
Navel Gazing ■ 273

to generate that tree, they showed that life is


clearly dominated by prokaryotes (Figure 15.5).


Merry Microbes


In 2010, as a gag, an undergraduate student in


Dunn’s lab decided to make a Christmas card


with streaks of microbes taken from people in


the lab. She asked for belly button swabs from


her coworkers, spread each sample on a petri


dish, and grew the bacteria into colonies. As


she grew bacteria from multiple individuals, it


quickly became clear that there was more vari-


ety among the microbes growing on people in


the lab than had been expected.


“Then it went from being a fun lab project to a


serious question,” says Dunn. The Christmas gag


had raised an important question: Why do one


person’s microbes differ from another’s? From


his experience studying ecology, Dunn knew that


microbes are critical in our lives. But neither Dunn


nor others knew which factors determine which


particular skin microbes a person has, or lacks.


So Dunn and his team began to study the


locally collected swabs. An early part of the


experiment engaged participants by visually


depicting each person’s microbial menagerie.


The team plated each sample onto a petri dish


and then took a picture of it for the microbes’


owner. Although prokaryotes are single-celled


organisms, some form colonies or long chains


of identical cells, produced by repeated splitting


begun by one original cell. This bacterial pattern


of reproduction resulted in bright, dramatic


patterns on the plates (Figure 15.6).


Under the microscope, the individual microbes


were even more diverse and elaborate. Bacteria


and Archaea cells are quite variable in shape, rang-


ing from rods to spheres to spirals (Figure 15.7).


Still, they all have a basic structural plan. Most


bacteria and many archaeans have a protective


cell wall that surrounds the plasma membrane.


Some have an additional wrapping around that


cell wall called a capsule. The capsule, made of


slippery biomolecules, works like an invisibility


cloak: it helps disease-causing bacteria evade the


immune system that protects organisms like us


from foreign invaders.


Dunn’s team observed many bacteria whose


surface was covered in short, hairlike projections


called pili (singular “pilus”), a common bacterial


Clostridiales

Bacillus

Micrococcus

Staphylococcus

Figure 15.6


Belly button bacterial biodiversity
Each petri dish contains colonies of the bacteria
collected from one person’s belly button sample.

Q1: Where in the figure would you place the first life found on Earth?

Q2: Identify where in the figure the Bacteria split off from the
ancestor of Archaea and Eukarya.

Q3: The figure (and thus the study) demonstrates that Archaea and
Eukarya are more closely related to each other than to Bacteria. How
is that illustrated?

Figure 15.5


The most recent tree of life
Researchers sequenced DNA from individuals in 3,083 genera across
all three domains. This information was combined by phylum, and the
placement of each phylum in the tree was based on its relatedness to other
phyla, as measured by DNA similarity.

Bac

teria

Arc
hae
a

Eu
ka
ry
a
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